Fashion Weekend Edition: Bike Date Dreamy

05Apr

The things you do for love. Like wearing a button-down shirt and a sweater for a Friday night bike date, and swapping your singlespeed’s pedals so you can wear regular shoes instead cycling shoes. Or growing a beard just because your sweetie wonders out loud how it would look on you. That’s what love is all about.

Dick swapped out SPDs for flat pedals for our first Bike Date Friday 3.5 years ago. He’s kept them on since.

Business casual is bike date perfect. Merino wool performs just as well in a sweater as in a cycling jersey.

After 30 days, the beard was thick and full and a little itchy. But it wasn’t really Dick’s style. Buh, bye!

About Fashion Friday: Inspired by a 2011 Bike to Work Day challenge sponsored by the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition, this series highlights the broad range of “dress for the destination” bicycling fashions.

3 responses to “Fashion Weekend Edition: Bike Date Dreamy”

My partner, who like me also cycles as part of our lifestyle since we don’t have a car, doesn’t cycle in jeans. He finds that heat from his bum area and sweat, seems to wear out his pants faster. Which is expensive….

So back to cycling tights or outdoor rain gear light pants. I know he would look just as a dapper as your partner…if he did. (My dearie also has narrow face, beard, etc.)

Well, no. I don’t think that’s his spending priority: he wants to replace a well-used, now-semi functional bike with a new one for daily use. (He has 3 other bikes for other types of riding.), plus there’s helping out his son financially in setting up his own sandwich shop…

He and I don’t have any qualms eating in clean cycling clothing in fancy restaurants….which we’ve done some times over the years in various cities/areas when we visit as tourists. I’m talking about places that serve dinners @ $45.00CAN per person or more.

Nearly 32,000 Americans die in car crashes annually. 80% of car crashes are PREVENTABLE. If the TOASTER was killing that many people we'd think it was ridiculous. We'd un-plug it and say, let's Fix The Toaster.